Lyman Goodrich Covell was married May
13th 1840 to Maria Elizabeth Hollis in Monro, Huron County, Ohio. On
October 10th 1840, Mr. Covell came to Steuben County Indiana and located on
Section 1 Pleasant Township, where he lived for 18 years. During this
time he was elected Township Trustee of Pleasant Township. In the fall
of 1858 he traded the farm in Pleasant Township for 80 acres in Section 15
of Scott Township. Here he was Justice of the Peace several terms and
performed many marriage ceremonies held court, etc.

The following (in part) is from "The Name and Family of
Covell" by Jesse O. Covell, Angola, Ind. Feb 15, 1940. "When he
(Lyman Goodrich Covell) was a small boy he went to live in the home
of a Dr. Chatfield, and for more than three years he made his home
there, during which time he received a part of his early education.
Later, he went to Albany, New York, where he was employed in a
mercantile establishment for over four years.

On August 19, 1834, his mother Jerusha Hollis Covell, died,
in or near the Town of Vienna, New York. Sometime about the year
1837 or 1838, he came to Lenawee County, Michigan, to visit his
relatives, and while there he purchased from Sanford and Lydia
House, of Lenawee County, 160 acres on land in section (1) one,
Pleasant, Steuben County, Indiana, for $300. This deed was executed
on February 27, 1839, and was recorded May 22, 1845 in Deed Record
#4, Page 307, of the records of Steuben County Indiana.

On May 13, 1840, he was united in marriage at Monroe
(Monroeville), Huron County, Ohio, to Maria Elizabeth Hollis, his
cousin, and on October 10, 1840, they came to Steuben County,
Indiana to make their home. In the latter part of 1840, or the early
part of 1841, they moved to Lima (now Howe) in La Grange County,
where Mr. Covell was employed as a school teacher for a couple of
years.

Sometime about the year 1842 or 1843, they returned to their
farm in Steuben County, where they lived in Pleasant Township for
more than eighteen years. In the year 1842, they sold forty acres on
their farm to Milton J. Bradley for seventy-five ($75.00) dollars,
this deed being executed March 19, 1842, and was recorded April 21,
1843, in deed record #2, page 460, records of Steuben County. On
August 10, 1845, they sold forty acres more of their farm to Henry
Rupple, for seventy-five ($75.00) dollars, which deed is recorded in
Vol. #3, page 34 of the deed records of Steuben County. On October
11, 1858, they traded their eighty acre farm in Pleasant Township,
to George Smiley for eighty acres of land in Scott Township, and in
February 1859, they moved with their family to their new home in
Scott Township.

Here in Scott Township Mr. and Mrs. Covell labored to clear
and improve their farm, and to raise and educate their children, and
it was here that they both spent the remainder of their lives. Mr. &
Mrs. Covell were members of the Disciple Church, and they were
always kind and charitable to the needy and distressed, always ready
with both time and money to assist any who needed their aid.

Here at the farm home on August 28, 1885, Maria Elizabeth
Covell the wife of Lyman G. Covell, passed away. In the early years
of Pleasant Township, Lyman G. Covell was a school teacher, and
served his township at least one term as Township Trustee. He also
worked at the carpenter trade in his younger days, and was one of
the carpenters that erected the Old Mill in Angola in 1868. After
moving to Scott Township, he served several years as Justice of the
Peace.

Lyman Goodrich Covell led an active and useful life until
about the year of 1885, when he retired from the active management
of his farm and made his home with his son and daughter-in-law,
William S. and Maria E. Covell. On April 19, 1894, he fell and
fractured his hip, and for more than three years he was confined to
his bed, being cared for by his son and daughter-in-law William S.
and Maria E. Covell. On July 11, 1897, he passed away, after
completing a good and useful life of 86 years, 10 months and 16
days. He is buried beside his wife and three small children in the
Old Cemetery, located in the northwest part of Angola, Indiana."